Great is Thy faithfulness

1
“Great is Thy faithfulness,” O God my Father,
There is no shadow of turning with Thee;
Thou changest not, Thy compassions, they fail not
As Thou hast been Thou forever wilt be.
  “Great is Thy faithfulness!” “Great is Thy faithfulness!”
  Morning by morning new mercies I see;
All I have needed Thy hand hath provided—
    “Great is Thy faithfulness,” Lord, unto me!
2
Summer and winter, and springtime and harvest,
Sun, moon and stars in their courses above,
Join with all nature in manifold witness
To Thy great faithfulness, mercy and love.
3
Pardon for sin and a peace that endureth,
Thine own dear presence to cheer and to guide;
Strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow,
Blessings all mine, with ten thousand beside!
1385
Abraham Abbey

Accra, Teshie/Greda Estate, Ghana

Indeed the Scriptures says.

He is a faithful God who keeps His covenant for a thousand generations.

He is God of faithfulness.


Chioma

Lagos, Nigeria

Thank You Father for Your faithfulness.


Dionne Denton

Middlesex

Yes - indeed a classic hymn which is meaningful to those of us who tend to reflect on the struggles and personal challenges we've encountered and yet overcome due to God's unchanging love & faithfulness. There's no greater love than a man layeth down his life for a friend. Jesus is that friend; a faithful friend! Be encouraged today!


Jeanie

KY, United States

This is one of my favorite songs and it was sung at my fathers funeral yesterday. God is so faithful! He has truly provided all that I needed and his mercies are new every morning. Praise God, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit!❤️


Kinya Kaunjuga

Nairobi, Kenya

I started singing hymns by myself as part of an evening prayer session...just to try, you know...like we read about the great teachers of faith did/do...well my goodness, it changed my life. I found that it’s truly a secret weapon to drawing closer to God, to feeling His presence, to not changing your circumstances but changing your mood, thoughts, emotions and feelings. Along with the Word of God, praising God yourself quietly out loud with songs like these will lift your spirit and even though not instantly, over time, will fill you with the strength and peace from God that only comes with time in His presence simply looking unto Him, surrendering, worshipping through the pain and trusting regardless of how hard this life can be.


P Amos

India

Reading Isaiah 50:4, I remembered the words of this song, and was drawn to sing it by myself this morning. With the chill weather around, brought about by the changing seasons, I was reminded of our Father's love for us in making the seasons as they are. Morning by morning, He draws us to Him, to teach us, and to be embraced by His mercy, that continues to be new each morning....


Edward Shoniwa

Lancaster, Texas, United States

I have sang this this hymn all my life but last weekend I grasped the meaning of it on a higher level.

Great is His faithfulness.


Jude Yetshe Essiene

Yaounde, Centre, Cameroon

I am blesssed singing along these wonderful words and music. Really, His faithfulness is great.


Emily Omondi

Kisumu, Nyanza, Kenya

Hallelujah, I feel blessed.


Phil

Spring, Texas, United States

I was reading Lamentations 3: 22-24 and this old beautiful hymn came into my mind and I needed to sing it. God is so Faithful to all His promises. Thank You God of my fathers for saving me through Your Son Jesus Christ.

Although we are unfaithful, God is faithful. Lamentations 3:23b says, "Great is Your faithfulness." The chorus of a well-known hymn on God's faithfulness (Hymns, #19) says, "'Great is Thy faithfulness!' 'Great is Thy faithfulness!' / Morning by morning new mercies I see; / All I have needed Thy hand has provided—/ 'Great is Thy faithfulness,' Lord, unto me!" We may understand what the Bible says and what this hymn says about God's faithfulness either in a natural way or in a spiritual way. When you sing this hymn, how do you understand the word faithfulness? If you understand God's faithfulness in a natural way, you may think that He is faithful primarily in the matter of material provisions or physical blessings. When some say that God is faithful, they mean that He is faithful to take care of their material needs. However, in 1 Corinthians 1:9 Paul says, "God is faithful, through whom you were called into the fellowship of His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord." God is faithful in this matter, but He may not be faithful to provide you a large house or a well-paying job. I would not deny the fact that God is faithful in caring for our welfare. My point is that God's faithfulness is not according to our natural understanding.

Consider the sufferings of the apostle Paul. He was called, commissioned, burdened, and sent by God, but wherever he went he had troubles. For example, as soon as he began to preach Christ, he began to suffer persecution. He even had to escape from Damascus by being lowered down the wall in a basket. Does this mean that God was not faithful to Paul? No, it means that God's faithfulness is not according to our natural understanding.

When we believed in the Lord Jesus, we might have expected to have peace and blessing. But instead we might have had many troubles and might have lost our security, our health, or our possessions. When some Christians experience such things, they may question God's faithfulness and ask why He did not prevent hardships from happening to them.

We need to realize that in allowing us to have troubles, God is faithful in His purpose to turn us from idols and bring us back to Himself. Our peace, safety, health, and possessions may become idols to us, and God is faithful to take these things away so that we may drink of Him as the fountain of living waters. If our house or our possessions become idols to us, we drink of them and not of God. God's faithfulness is a matter of dealing with these idols and causing us to drink of Him.

God is faithful in leading us into His economy, and His economy is for us to drink Christ, to eat Christ, to enjoy Christ, to absorb Christ, and to assimilate Christ that God may have His increase with us to fulfill His economy. This is God's faithfulness.

Instead of drinking of God as the fountain of living waters, Israel drank of their idols. Therefore, God used the Babylonians to deal with these idols and also to destroy Jerusalem and even the temple, which had become an idol to them. We need to see that we are not better than Israel. Anything can become an idol to us. But God is faithful in fulfilling His economy. In His faithfulness He deals with our idols that we may drink of Him. We all need to drink of God as the fountain of living waters, receiving Christ into us and assimilating Him, so that He may increase for the fulfillment of God's economy to have His expression through His counterpart.

Whereas God is faithful, we are neither faithful nor chaste but go to many other husbands. After failing God, we may receive some mercy and grace and therefore repent and weep, saying, "How pitiful I am! For a long time I have not loved the Lord very much, and I have not attended the meetings." While we are repenting and weeping, God is rejoicing. However, if we repent and weep too much, even our repentance may become an idol. We may testify in a meeting, saying that we have thoroughly repented to God. But this may be a matter of self-boasting and be a self-made idol. Therefore, after repenting, we should begin to drink of the living waters, praising God, giving thanks to Him for everything, and enjoying Him. This is what God wants. God is not interested in anything other than our enjoyment of Christ.

Jeremiah's speaking in Lamentations 3:22-26 is another pattern of prophesying: "It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness. The Lord is my portion, saith my soul; therefore will I hope in him. The Lord is good unto them that wait for him, to the soul that seeketh him. It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord." Jeremiah told us that it is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed. This is not foretelling but blessing, well-speaking. He told us that the mercies, the compassions, of the Lord are new every morning. We need to learn to prophesy in this way. Jeremiah told the Lord, "Great is thy faithfulness." There is a well-known hymn based upon this verse (Hymns, #19). Jeremiah also said that the Lord was his portion. It is marvelous that there was a prophet in the Old Testament who knew that the Lord was his portion. When we tell others that the Lord is our portion, we are speaking the Lord to them.

Piano Hymns